Proactiveness and the use of secrecy in family and nonfamily smes: evidence from the wine industry

Research output: Contribution to conferenceConference abstract for conferenceResearch

Standard

Proactiveness and the use of secrecy in family and nonfamily smes : evidence from the wine industry. / Beukel, Karin; Tyler, Beverly; Fernández, Elena; Discua Cruz, Allan; Lahneman, Brooke.

2018. Abstract from DRUID Society Conference.

Research output: Contribution to conferenceConference abstract for conferenceResearch

Harvard

Beukel, K, Tyler, B, Fernández, E, Discua Cruz, A & Lahneman, B 2018, 'Proactiveness and the use of secrecy in family and nonfamily smes: evidence from the wine industry', DRUID Society Conference, 11/06/2018 - 13/06/2018.

APA

Beukel, K., Tyler, B., Fernández, E., Discua Cruz, A., & Lahneman, B. (2018). Proactiveness and the use of secrecy in family and nonfamily smes: evidence from the wine industry. Abstract from DRUID Society Conference.

Vancouver

Beukel K, Tyler B, Fernández E, Discua Cruz A, Lahneman B. Proactiveness and the use of secrecy in family and nonfamily smes: evidence from the wine industry. 2018. Abstract from DRUID Society Conference.

Author

Beukel, Karin ; Tyler, Beverly ; Fernández, Elena ; Discua Cruz, Allan ; Lahneman, Brooke. / Proactiveness and the use of secrecy in family and nonfamily smes : evidence from the wine industry. Abstract from DRUID Society Conference.

Bibtex

@conference{d7e1ee88eab84390ad925567184d90a4,
title = "Proactiveness and the use of secrecy in family and nonfamily smes: evidence from the wine industry",
abstract = "Capturing value from scientific knowledge has been described in the context of university-industry collaborations and science-based entrepreneurship. Value capture mechanisms aim to ensure a mainly monetary reward from the exchange of the value created (e.g., by patenting or licensing). However, most common knowledge dissemination mechanisms in science do not directly result into capturing monetary value. This leads to the paradoxical situation that scientists engage in value creation (i.e., scientific knowledge production) without anticipating to capture value. This study doubts that scientists act economically irrational. We explore how value capture principles work in science and how this affects the willingness to engage in value creation by distinguishing between use value and exchange value. Our findings show that the realized exchange value for scientists does not only consist of an objective monetary part, but also of a subjective part. This subjective exchange value is considered as valuable due to scientists needs (i.e., academic survival, egoidentity status validation, and societal impact). The desire to satisfy these needs drives scientists{\textquoteright} willingness to engage in scientific knowledge production. Our findings entail three theoretical contributions. First, we add to the understanding of value capture in science by exploring the scientists-specific relationship between value creation, value capture and their realized use and exchange value, as well as the underlying reasons why the realized exchange value is considered as valuable. Second, we discuss these findings in the light of open science. Third, we point on the importance to consider individual-level factors to assess value capture in science.",
author = "Karin Beukel and Beverly Tyler and Elena Fern{\'a}ndez and {Discua Cruz}, Allan and Brooke Lahneman",
year = "2018",
language = "English",
note = "DRUID Society Conference ; Conference date: 11-06-2018 Through 13-06-2018",

}

RIS

TY - ABST

T1 - Proactiveness and the use of secrecy in family and nonfamily smes

T2 - DRUID Society Conference

AU - Beukel, Karin

AU - Tyler, Beverly

AU - Fernández, Elena

AU - Discua Cruz, Allan

AU - Lahneman, Brooke

PY - 2018

Y1 - 2018

N2 - Capturing value from scientific knowledge has been described in the context of university-industry collaborations and science-based entrepreneurship. Value capture mechanisms aim to ensure a mainly monetary reward from the exchange of the value created (e.g., by patenting or licensing). However, most common knowledge dissemination mechanisms in science do not directly result into capturing monetary value. This leads to the paradoxical situation that scientists engage in value creation (i.e., scientific knowledge production) without anticipating to capture value. This study doubts that scientists act economically irrational. We explore how value capture principles work in science and how this affects the willingness to engage in value creation by distinguishing between use value and exchange value. Our findings show that the realized exchange value for scientists does not only consist of an objective monetary part, but also of a subjective part. This subjective exchange value is considered as valuable due to scientists needs (i.e., academic survival, egoidentity status validation, and societal impact). The desire to satisfy these needs drives scientists’ willingness to engage in scientific knowledge production. Our findings entail three theoretical contributions. First, we add to the understanding of value capture in science by exploring the scientists-specific relationship between value creation, value capture and their realized use and exchange value, as well as the underlying reasons why the realized exchange value is considered as valuable. Second, we discuss these findings in the light of open science. Third, we point on the importance to consider individual-level factors to assess value capture in science.

AB - Capturing value from scientific knowledge has been described in the context of university-industry collaborations and science-based entrepreneurship. Value capture mechanisms aim to ensure a mainly monetary reward from the exchange of the value created (e.g., by patenting or licensing). However, most common knowledge dissemination mechanisms in science do not directly result into capturing monetary value. This leads to the paradoxical situation that scientists engage in value creation (i.e., scientific knowledge production) without anticipating to capture value. This study doubts that scientists act economically irrational. We explore how value capture principles work in science and how this affects the willingness to engage in value creation by distinguishing between use value and exchange value. Our findings show that the realized exchange value for scientists does not only consist of an objective monetary part, but also of a subjective part. This subjective exchange value is considered as valuable due to scientists needs (i.e., academic survival, egoidentity status validation, and societal impact). The desire to satisfy these needs drives scientists’ willingness to engage in scientific knowledge production. Our findings entail three theoretical contributions. First, we add to the understanding of value capture in science by exploring the scientists-specific relationship between value creation, value capture and their realized use and exchange value, as well as the underlying reasons why the realized exchange value is considered as valuable. Second, we discuss these findings in the light of open science. Third, we point on the importance to consider individual-level factors to assess value capture in science.

M3 - Conference abstract for conference

Y2 - 11 June 2018 through 13 June 2018

ER -

ID: 218084390